
[100% Off] Future Of Banking: Financial Architecture In The Digital Era
Learn about Data as an Asset, AI, Cloud Computing, Payments, Platform Finance, Blockchain, Decentralized Finance & Trust
Requirements
- Basic understanding of banking comes in handy
- Fundamental knowledge of accounting principles (e.g., how to read a balance sheet)
Description
Banking is often described through products: loans, deposits, mobile apps, payments. But beneath those services lies something far more powerful — financial architecture. A system that creates money, transforms risk, moves value, and sustains trust at national and global scale. This course is about understanding that system — and how it is being rebuilt.
Why This Course Matters
We are living through a structural shift in banking.
Legacy core systems are being challenged by cloud infrastructure.
APIs are unbundling financial services.
Data and AI are transforming risk and decision-making.
Digital payments and wallets are reshaping customer relationships.
Blockchain and DeFi are testing alternative trust models.
Central banks are rethinking the very nature of money.
To understand the future of banking, you must understand how banking is architected.
That is exactly what this course delivers.
What This Journey Covers
We begin with first principles: What is banking, really? How do balance sheets create money? Why is trust the core product? You’ll explore traditional banking architecture and understand how money flows through the system.
From there, we examine why this architecture is under pressure — from technology, regulation, cost structures, and changing customer expectations.
You will then explore the modern banking stack: core systems, cloud computing, modular design, APIs, and platform models. We move into data as a strategic asset, artificial intelligence in decision-making, and the foundations of cybersecurity, identity, and digital trust.
Next, we analyze the infrastructure of money itself — payments, wallets, super apps, stablecoins, and tokenized deposits — before examining blockchain and decentralized finance as alternative financial architectures.
Finally, we step back and look at systemic stability: digital risk, central bank digital currencies, financial resilience, and what the bank of the future may look like.
Author(s): Jörg Marinko








